MIDNIGHT

         
        ’Tis midnight o’er the dim mere’s lonely bosom,
            Dark, dusky, windy midnight: swift are driven
        The swelling vapours onward: every blossom
            Bathes its bright petals in the tears of heaven.
        Imperfect, half-seen objects meet the sight,
            The other half our fancy must pourtray;
        A wan, dull, lengthen’d sheet of swimming light
            Lies the broad lake: the moon conceals her ray,
        Sketch’d faintly by a pale and lurid gleam
            Shot thro’ the glimmering clouds: the lovely planet
        Is shrouded in obscurity; the scream
            Of owl is silenc’d; and the rocks of granite
        Rise tall and drearily, while damp and dank
        Hang the thick willows on the reedy bank.
        Beneath, the gurgling eddies slowly creep,
            Blacken’d by foliage; and the glutting wave,
        That saps eternally the cold grey steep,
            Sounds heavily within the hollow cave.
        All earth is restless–from his glossy wing
            The heath-fowl lifts his head at intervals;
            Wet, driving, rainy, come the bursting squalls;
        All nature wears her dun dead covering.
        Tempest is gather’d, and the brooding storm
        Spreads its black mantle o’er the mountain’s form;
        And, mingled with the rising roar, is swelling,
        From the far hunter’s booth, the blood hound’s yelling.
        The water-falls in various cadence chiming,
            Or in one loud unbroken sheet descending,
               Salute each other thro’ the night’s dark womb;
            The moaning pine-trees to the wild blast bending,
               Are pictured faintly thro’ the chequer’d gloom;
        The forests, half-way up the mountain climbing,
            Resound with crash of falling branches; quiver
               Their aged mossy trunks: the startled doe
            Leaps from her leafy lair: the swelling river
               Winds his broad stream majestic, deep, and slow.